ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Weston Ochse is a former intelligence officer and special operations soldier who has engaged enemy combatants, terrorists, narco smugglers, and human traffickers. His personal war stories include performing humanitarian operations over Bangladesh, being deployed to Afghanistan, and a near miss being cannibalized in Papua New Guinea.
His fiction and non-fiction has been praised by USA Today, The Atlantic, The New York Post, The Financial Times of London, and Publishers Weekly. The American Library Association labeled him one of the Major Horror Authors of the 21st Century. His work has also won the Bram Stoker Award, been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, and won multiple New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards. A writer of more than 26 books in multiple genres, his military supernatural series SEAL Team 666 has been optioned to be a movie starring Dwayne Johnson. His military sci fi series, which starts with Grunt Life, has been praised for its PTSD-positive depiction of soldiers at peace and at war.
Weston likes to be called a chaotic good paladin and challenges anyone to disagree. After all, no one can really stand a goody two-shoes lawful good character. They can be so annoying. It's so much more fun to be chaotic, even when you're striving to save the world. You can argue with him about this and other things online at Living Dangerously or on Facebook at Badasswriter. All content of this blog is copywrited by Weston Ochse.

Today we have Joe McKinney.I've known Joe since he rolled rolled me up for soliciting back in the '90s. I was in a suit, he was in a dress, it was love at first sight until I discovered he was undercover. Who knew he'd look so good in polka dots.

Just kidding. I count Joe one of my good friends in the industry. There's probably nothing I wouldn't do for him. We first met, when was it, 2004? 2006? Does time fly that quickly? Anyway, Joe's responsible for the Deadworld Series-- smart, procedural, character-driving zombie novels. He also wrote one hell of a ghost story in Inheritance, which I called 'an artful haunting with the gloomy quality of a Terrance Malick crime drama.' For those who don't get the Malick reference, I'm specifically referring to Badlands, the loosely based on the real life murder spree of Charles Starkweather. His book holds the same erstwhile gloom that frames the movie.

1. What’s your favorite military movie, book or television show?

Narrowing
down to one is almost impossible, especially when you open the field to books,
movies and TV.On the small screen I loved Pacific and the Ken Burns documentary on
the Civil War.I even have a soft spot
for Hogan’s Heroes, which I used to
watch everyday after school.My favorite
books would probably be Tim O’Brien’s The
Things They Carried and Shelby Foote’s three volume masterpiece, The Civil War.But since I have to pick a favorite I’m going
to have to go with Alfred Hitchcock’s under-appreciated 1944 classic, Lifeboat.

2. Why is it your favorite? Here’s where you can ramble a bit.

Well, I
could have named half a dozen war movies that are better than Lifeboat.Saving
Private Ryan, for instance.Or The Great Escape.Or Patton.Or Full
Metal Jacket.Even some of the
second tier war movies are better, like Breaker
Morant and Victory and The Big Red One.But none of them excited me the way Lifeboat did.It was the first of Hitchcock’s closed space
films, a style that he went on to perfect in Rope and Rear Window, and
I think the sense of claustrophobia that limited setting created is a big part
of the picture’s appeal for me.It
creates a natural pressure cooker for the characters as they slip into
desperation and mutual distrust.Lifeboat also benefits from a script by
John Steinbeck (a good part of it, at any rate).The characterization is strong, creating
complex portraits of Germans that aren’t really all that bad and Allies that
aren’t really all that good.And of course the final production carries
Hitchcock’s stylistic fingerprints all over it, which is never a bad
thing.Sure it’s not the grand scope of
films like Saving Private Ryan or Toro Toro Toro, but it’s big drama on a
small stage, and it’s a film I keep coming back to year after year.

3. What themes are overused? And is it overused, or just truthful observation?

Probably
the whole “band of brothers” thing.And
I’m not just talking about our modern films like Saving Private Ryan and all the others.Look at the Shakespeare play from which that
phrase comes, Henry V.On the surface the play reads like a
patriotic pep rally, but it’s actually layered with irony condemning many of
the big hero attributes we’ve heaped on Henry.It was clear the “band of brothers” theme was tired even then, in the
1590s.I don’t think it’s gotten any
fresher since then.

Weston Ochse is the author of more than twenty books, most recently the SEAL Team 666 series which has been optioned by MGM Films. He's also the author of the Grunt Life series, a military science fiction series concentrating on the lives of PTSD survivors. His first novel, Scarecrow Gods, won
the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in First Novel and his
short fiction has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. His work has
appeared in comic books, and magazines such as Cemetery Dance and
Soldier of Fortune. He lives in the Arizona desert within rock throwing
distance of Mexico. He is a military veteran with more than 30 years of military
service and currently returned from a deployment to Afghanistan.